Posts tagged book summary

Being Yourself and Braving the Wilderness

Whether we were trying to fit in with our peers as children or hoping our coworkers will like us as adults, we’ve all felt the desire to belong. It can also feel impossible to find acceptance while being yourself. Braving the Wilderness by Brené Brown explores the need to belong and teaches us that to truly belong, we must be comfortable being our most authentic selves. Using…

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Increase Your Abundance with Laina Buenostar’s Happy Money Method

How do we generate more wealth? Through her own experimentation, Buenostar has devised a deceptively simple two-step method to inviting abundance in our lives. She calls it the Happy Money method and it only takes five dollars to get started. Financial literacy education is going the way of the dodo. Children are growing up with no idea how to gain or manage money and it…

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Never Eat Alone, Expanded and Updated by Keith Ferrazzi

The key to success is developing genuine, meaningful connections. Never Eat Alone: And Other Secrets to Success, One Relationship at a Time by Keith Ferrazzi is a self-improvement book focused on helping the reader sharpen their networking skills and nurture their professional and personal relationships. Because ultimately, to sum up the book’s overall message, if you’re eating alone, you’re missing out on an opportunity to…

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Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking by Malcolm Gladwell

In Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking, Malcom Gladwell explores the psychology behind decision making and its correlation with our subconscious biases. Gladwell incorporates scientific studies and findings with a series of stories about judging by first impressions to help the reader understand why we make these decisions before taking the time to carefully consider the facts. Have you ever had a feeling that…

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Lessons Learned from the Original Behavioral Economists in The Undoing Project by Michael Lewis

In Michael Lewis: The Undoing Project, he explores the partnership of Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, two of the most famous psychologists you’ve never heard of. Though the pair live in obscurity outside of academia, their work—often considered the scientific community’s first foray into behavioral economics—includes some of the most often-cited academic papers of all time, and have completely changed the way we understand and…

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Simple Lessons on Living from Shauna Niequist’s Present Over Perfect

Shauna Niequist seemed to have it all. She had a successful career, a loving family, and wanted for nothing. But, despite how good her life looked on the outside, she was exhausted and deeply unhappy. She spent her entire adult life working longer, pushing harder, and striving to meet the expectations set by the world around her… or, rather, the expectations she thought had been…

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Your Love May Be Lost in Translation: Gary Chapman Explains the Five Languages of Love

Gary Chapman is a marriage counselor who, over years of helping couples work toward healthier relationships, has found that one consistent problem in unhappy relationships is miscommunication. Not just failing to talk to each other, but failing to express love in the same language. If one partner expects to be loved through quality time but the other expects gifts, neither are going to feel fully…

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Acceptance, Persistence, and Laughter: Kevin Hart’s Life Lessons

When you open Kevin Hart’s new book I Can’t Make This Up, the first thing readers might notice is that the introduction is labeled “Mandatory.” The message is repeated in the first two sentences: “This introduction is mandatory. That means you have to read it.” In this mandatory introduction, Hart introduces three words to readers that he explains are important for understanding the lessons he…

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